SUFFOLK SAILOR PLANNING TO CIRCUMNAVIGATE BRITAIN WOULD HAVE BEEN ALL AT SEA WITHOUT MACMILLAN SUPPORT

MacmillanEngland
8 min readMay 5, 2021

· Ipswich sailor Olle Nash is planning to sail around Britain to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support, despite having bowel cancer that requires ongoing chemotherapy treatment to keep it under control

· He is undertaking the journey in recognition of the Macmillan services and professionals at Ipswich Hospital who helped him, and his late daughter Toni, to cope with their cancer diagnoses

Sailor Olle Nash

While much of the British public has mustered the confidence to book, or at least consider booking, a staycation in the UK, one cancer patient from Ipswich is planning to circumnavigate Great Britain by boat to raise much-needed cash for Macmillan Cancer Support.

Olle Nash, 63, will weigh anchor on 22nd May at Fox’s Marina in his hometown of Ipswich to make the trip of a lifetime around England, Wales and Scotland, despite being on active chemotherapy treatment for bowel cancer and permanently dependent on a colostomy, which his family have named Boris.

His itinerary is unlikely to mirror that of any sailor who has come before him, as the reality of living with cancer means he will have to return to Ipswich just three weeks into his journey to undergo a five-week cycle of intensive radiotherapy treatment.

A four-month adventure on the choppy waters lapping Britain’s shores may not be an obvious pastime for someone living with cancer, but Olle — whose boat is called ‘Renegade’ — has always been one to push against the tide.

He said: “When I was first diagnosed with cancer, I didn’t ask those awkward questions like ‘what does this mean for my life?’ I just wanted to get on with it, but I did think that perhaps I wouldn’t always be as fit as I am now, so if there were things I wanted to do, I should do them. I’d been hoping to spend my retirement sailing all over the place, so I combined this ambition with my fundraising.”

While many people emerging from a year of shielding will feel apprehensive about resuming their day-to-day activities, Olle is raring to swap his year of isolation and hospital trips for a challenge that he hopes will raise £10,000 to fund more medical, practical and emotional support for people living with cancer in Ipswich.

The former IT security manager had long dreamed of taking to the seas come retirement, having begun a lifelong love affair with sailing as a child learning to sail on Suffolk’s River Deben. When his working life was brought to a premature halt by his ailing health, however, his later-life adventures appeared, for a brief moment, to hang in the balance.

He had enjoyed a relatively clean bill of health until 2018, when he was diagnosed and treated for a rare condition called Extra-Mammary Paget’s Disease, which ultimately required an operation to remove part of his large intestine.

It was only during this 10-hour procedure at St Mark’s Hospital in London that a suspect growth on the inside of his anus was discovered and sent for testing. Olle remained in the dark however, until a surprise appointment with an oncologist in October 2019.

He said: “I had travelled down to St Mark’s Hospital in Harrow from Ipswich for what I thought was a routine follow-up appointment, but a miscommunication meant that I found myself in a room with an oncologist, without any idea why. She asked how I planned to travel down to Harrow for treatment every two weeks and I just said — ‘what treatment?’

“She explained that the tumour they’d found had been cancerous, that it had metastasised into my lymph nodes in the pelvic area but couldn’t be removed and cured. Instead, I would have to have chemotherapy treatment every two weeks for the rest of my life to keep it at bay.

“It was very difficult to take in and I didn’t tell my wife until I got home, which by this point, was only about 12 weeks after the initial operation. The whole day was made more stressful by all the travelling I had to do on my own. There was a sense of denial at first, because I hardly ever get ill — it’s not me — but I wasn’t upset, because there wasn’t much point. It was just another obstacle in life and I had no choice but to get on with it.”

The news was made harder to bear by the recent loss of his daughter Toni, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2017, but he felt safe in the knowledge that the Macmillan professionals who had supported her through taxing courses of chemotherapy and the final months of her life would also be there for him.

Olle prepares to give his daughter Toni away at her wedding, just two months before she died

He adds: “We were at a total loss when Toni was first told about her cancer, we were like headless chickens and didn’t know where to turn. The Macmillan Information Manager at Ipswich Hospital was just so lovely, every time myself or my other daughters walked in she was there with open arms and a big cuddle.

“I can’t praise the people there highly enough — we got to know them very well, to the point they became like an extended family, so I was already aware of the services available once I was diagnosed.

“It also means a lot that some of the nurses who’ve treated and cared for me are the same as those who treated Toni. How can I ever thank Macmillan for what they’ve done for my daughter and what they’ve done for me and my family?”

Going into the pandemic Olle was worried about rising infection rates and how Covid-19 might threaten his health and care, but the ongoing support of Macmillan nurses at Ipswich and St Mark’s Hospitals meant he always had someone to turn to with his queries, and never feared that his chemotherapy treatment at the Woolverstone Macmillan Centre would be discontinued.

The Gulf War veteran recently received approval from his oncologist to substitute intravenous chemotherapy treatment for tablet-based medication during his trip, which he can administer himself to save him numerous trips back to Ipswich. This, plus confirmation of his radiotherapy treatment, has meant he can finally firm up key parts of his schedule, but even once he has departed these shores, changing tides, a capricious weather system and the availability of crew will continue to govern his course and timings.

The only days set in stone, unless the wheels come off the Government’s plans to unlock, are Saturday 22nd May, when a small launch party will see him off at Fox’s Marina, and Sunday 23rd May, when Renegade will leave the River Orwell at Harwich for the North Sea.

He’ll be joined on this first stretch by son-in-law John, who married Toni whilst she was undergoing chemotherapy treatment, Alan, a friend from his Army days and Nick, a longstanding crew member. Friends and family will then take it in turns to join the crew of the 37.6ft, 1979 Moody sailing yacht, which Olle will skipper. If all goes to plan, he hopes to land back in Ipswich in September.

His anticlockwise route — which he admits will feature two cheeky shortcuts through Loch Ness and down the Caledonian Canal — will at points bring him within miles of specialist Macmillan services, like the Macmillan Horizon Centre in Brighton, that have supported people with cancer through the daily hardships of the pandemic.

And just days into his outbound journey will be a stark reminder of the critical value of fundraising for Macmillan Cancer Support, when he passes the Cromer coastline that is home to the new North Norfolk Macmillan Centre.

Due to open its doors later this year, the Centre will make vital cancer care and support more accessible for a population that has historically had to make long and exhausting trips to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital for tests, treatment and follow-up appointments.

Olle has already shored up a lot of support from friends, family and former colleagues from around the globe, and even received an unexpected video message from record-breaking sailor Tracy Edwards MBE.

Melanie Humphreys, a Relationship Fundraising Manager for Macmillan in the East of England said:

“Olle’s fundraising will not only help people diagnosed with cancer in the short-term, but also the many more people who will receive the lifechanging news they have cancer in the future.

“With Macmillan research suggesting that tens of thousands of people in the UK are currently living with an undiagnosed cancer as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic[i], the harsh reality is that more people could receive their diagnosis at a later stage, pushing up the likelihood that they’ll have more cancer-related health issues and support needs as a result.[ii]

“Regardless of how early or advanced their cancer is, or whether it’s financial, emotional or clinical support they need, Macmillan services and professionals will always do whatever it takes to make everyday life that bit easier for them. But that wouldn’t be possible without supporters like Olle, as 98% of our income comes from public donations.”

PLEASE CREDIT: Help Olle reach his £10,000 target for Macmillan Cancer Support by donating at: www.justgiving.com/fundraising/olle-nash

Olle will be documenting his progress by way of a blog on his Sailing With Cancer website, and through his Twitter and LinkedIn social media accounts.

For comprehensive cancer information and support, including Macmillan’s latest guidance on the impact of coronavirus on cancer care, visit www.macmillan.org.uk.

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For further information, please contact:

Talia Samuelson, Macmillan External Communications Officer — East of England

07703 676493| tsamuelson@macmillan.org.uk

About Macmillan Cancer Support

At Macmillan, we give people with cancer everything we’ve got. If you’re diagnosed, your worries are our worries. We will move mountains to help you live life as fully as you can.

And we don’t stop there. We’re going all out to find ever better ways to help people with cancer, helping to bring forward the day when everyone gets life-transforming support from day one.

[i] Macmillan Cancer Support. The Forgotten C? The impact of Covid-19 on cancer care. October 2020. www.macmillan.org.uk/assets/forgotten-c-impact-of-covid-19-on-cancer-care.pdf

[ii]Between 2011 and 2015, one-year survival for those diagnosed via an emergency presentation was just 40%, compared with 85% of those diagnosed following an urgent two-week-wait referral from their GP. Public Health England’s National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service (NCRAS). Survival by cancer site and diagnostic route.

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